Image Archive





























Nichole Sams, VISIONS'24 Graduate Student Participant

Leo Couchon, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Zariel Zemudio, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Makayla Joseph, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Naomi Wharton, VISIONS'24 Graduate Student Participant

Paige McKay, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Will Puzella, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Victoria deJong, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Juliet Wiener, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Nikola Jensen, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Morrigan Havely, VISIONS'24 Student Participant

Laura Lapham, Scientist (University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science) and V24 Participant

Ben Tradd, V24 Jason Expedition Lead Legs 1 and 2

Hugh Popenoe, Jason Team V24

Scott McCue, Jason Data Engineer V24

Sarah Sergent, Jason Contractor V24

Tom Lanagan, Jason Research Engineer V24

John Teal, Jr., VISIONS'24 student participant

Catherine Rasgaitis, V24 Student Participant

V23 Leg 3 VISIONS students and UW employees Andrew Paley, Mariela White, and Mitch Elend preparing to subsample the hydrothermal fluids collected by the RAS/PPS instrument during the 2022 deployment period. Credit: M. Vardaro, University of Washington.

VISIONS'23 science party and students on the way out of Newport to begin Leg 3. Credit: M. Elend, University of Washington.

Victoria University of Wellington/NIWA graduate student (and former VISIONS'14 student) Katie Bigham and RCA Research Scientist Mariela White try on their survival "Gumby" suits during the Leg 2 safety meeting. Credit: M. Elend, University of Washington.

Leg 2 VISIONS'23 students Alessia Simmen, Brian Lam, and Mei Ettari (with MARUM engineer Eberhardt Kopiske in the background) as the Thompson leaves Newport for the start of Leg 2. Credit: M. Elend, University of Washington

Keith Blood, UW/APL Electrical Engineer

Garrett Raemhild, UW/APL Field Engineer

Leg 1 Co-Chief Scientist Julie Nelson helping VISIONS'22 students run chemical analyses on the verification water samples collected at the Axial Base site.

Leg 1 students learning about how to prepare a CTD and Niskin bottle rosette for validation sampling. Credit: M. Elend, V22

VISIONS students on Leg 1 of the 2022 OOI RCA O&M cruise as the Thompson steams out of Newport. Credit: M. Elend, University of Washington, V22.
- Anemone
- Animal
- Arthropod
- ASHES
- Axial
- Axial Base
- Axial Biology
- Axial Caldera
- Bacteria
- Basalt Lava
- BEP
- Biofouling
- Biology
- Camds
- Camera
- Camhd
- Central Caldera
- Ciliates
- Cnidaria
- Coastal Biology
- Crab
- Deep Profiler Mooring
- Dive Highlights
- Eastern Caldera
- Echinoderms
- Endurance Array
- ENLIGHTEN 10
- Exploratorium
- Fish
- Geology
- HD Camera
- HPIES
- Hydrate Ridge
- Hydrates
- Hydrophone
- Hydrothermal Vents
- Illustration
- Inshore 80 Meters
- Instrument
- International District
- J-BOX
- Jason
- Jellyfish
- Junction Box
- K12
- Lava
- Mollusk
- Moorings
- Nodes
- Nudibranch
- Octopus
- OOI
- Oregon Offshore
- Oregon Offshore 600 m
- Oregon Shelf
- Oregon Slope Base
- People
- PN1B
- PN1D
- Polychaetes
- PPSDN
- Primary Node
- RASFL
- ROCLS
- ROPOS
- ROPOS Dives
- RV Revelle
- RV Sikuliaq
- RV Thompson
- Salp
- Sample
- SC13
- Sea Cucumber
- Sea Star
- Sea Urchin
- Seafloor
- Seismometer
- Sensors
- Shallow Profiler Mooring
- Shark
- Shipboard
- Shore Station
- Slope Base
- Smoker
- Soft Coral
- Southern Hydrate Ridge
- Sponge
- Squid
- Students
- Tmpsf
- Tubeworms
- VISIONS 11 Leg 1
- VISIONS 11 Leg 2
- VISIONS 11 Viewers
- VISIONS 13
- VISIONS 14
- VISIONS 15
- VISIONS 16
- VISIONS 17
- VISIONS 18
- VISIONS 20
- VISIONS 22
- VISIONS 23
- Visualization